Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Two Steps Forward for GR Public…. One Step Back for MI?
Two Steps Forward for GR Public…. One Step Back for MI?
Jun 14, 2026 1:16 AM

In yesterday’s Grand Rapids Press (and appearing at on Monday), Monica Scott reports on the tenure reform bill signed by Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder last year and set to take effect in the 2013-2014 school year:

Last year, Gov. Rick Snyder signed a tenure reform bill pletely overhauled teacher performance evaluations, tying teachers’ grades to student achievement. But teachers and union leaders locally and across the state have said they think it’s unfair to be held accountable for the performance of students who don’t show up to class.

In response, the Grand Rapids school board mittee discussed enacting an attendance parable to other districts in the county. Scott notes that, according to Ron Gorman, executive director of high schools for Grand Rapids schools, “school districts around Kent County include a set number of absences students cannot exceed, but Grand Rapids does not include a specific number, rather the district has procedures for addressing absences.” Instead, the mittee discussed a policy that states students can only have a total of 12 absences per semester and if students are 15 or more minutes tardy for class, it would be viewed as an absence.”

As a graduate of a Kent county district that had parable attendance policy, I was a little surprised to learn that GR Public did not. This is certainly an improvement. Indeed, with their new policy, it sounds like it will be a large step in a good direction:

When a student has 12 absences or more in a semester class, the following would apply under the policy being discussed:

• If a student passes a class and earns a 70 percent or higher on the final exam, he or she receives the grade and credit earned in the class.

• If a student passes a class, and earns less than 70 percent on the final, he or she would receive an E and would not earn credit for the class. The principal or designee reserves the right, under extenuating circumstances, to modify this guideline.

Thus students are being incentivized to attend class and put forth a better effort in their studies. Even if they would pass with a D+ or worse, if their attendance is not up to par they will fail the class. Two steps forward for GR Public, in my opinion. But that does not really get at the bigger problem for MI….

While I support improving education quality and have said as much twice this week (here and here), I do not think that evaluating teachers based upon student grades is an effective way to do it. The purpose of student grades is to evaluate student performance, not teacher performance. A very good teacher may need to give some low marks in order to send a signal to students who are not putting forth enough effort or otherwise not succeeding that they need to take their studies more seriously and seek additional help.

Instead, by making student performance indicators (grades) a factor of teacher performance evaluations, the state of MI is incentivizing further grade inflation and lowered education quality. Teachers should not have to fear for their jobs if a student fails to earn a decent grade in their classes; there will always be problem students, and the factors contributing to poor student performance extend far beyond teachers into relationships (or lack thereof) with family and friends as well as other socioeconomic concerns.

In fact, the only logical reason to incentivize teachers to give higher grades would be if our educational standards were currently too high, not too low. The problem is not too many good students who are failing or scoring low marks because of tyrannical teachers with impossible standards; the problem is teachers with students who have serious behavior and attendance problems and who don’t believe that prioritizing their studies is a worthwhile endeavor for them. Certainly bad teachers with tenure do exist and need to be held accountable, but punishing teachers who give poor grades does not effectively address that problem. What students need are quality teachers (who also still exist) who are able to inspire even these students or, if necessary, send them a wake up call with grades appropriate to their level of achievement (or lack thereof). This bill, unfortunately, ties the hands of any good teachers who need to give low marks without worrying over their jobs. Thus, for MI, I predict that the unintended consequences of the new bill will run counter to the good intentions behind it. And as it stands it is only set to worsen in the future. According to Scott,

Beginning in 2013-14, student progress will count for 25 percent of a teacher’s evaluation, increasing to 40 percent the following year and 49 percent the year after that.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
If ‘Disability’ Were a U.S. State It Would Be the 8th Most Populous
In March I wrote about the government’s largest—and mostly hidden—social safety net: federal disability programs. The government spends more money each year on cash payments for these Americans than it spends on food stamps and bined. This group is so large that if every family receiving disability payments were put into one state it would rank eighth in ing in after Ohio but ahead of Georgia: The total number of people in the United States now receiving federal disability benefits...
Peter Schweizer Talks Congressional Insider Trading
In his bestseller, Throw Them All Out, Peter Schweizer declares, “The Permanent Political Class has no sense of urgency to change because, for them, business is good.” Schweizer, who is interviewed in the latest issue of Religion & Liberty, appeared today on the Mike Huckabee radio show to talk congressional insider trading. Schweizer told Huckabee that “Big government creates big profits for people that are in power.” Schweizer added that this is not a partisan problem but a human problem...
Enterprise is the Most ‘Effective Altruism’
Many of you know Jay Richards from his regular lecturing at Acton University. He has a newly co-authored piece in The Daily Caller, “Enterprise is the most ‘effective altruism.’” There’s more to be said on plex issue of helping the poor than can be put in a single op-ed, of course, but there’s some great food for thought here, particularly for those who view business and markets as necessarily part of the problem. Jay and Anne Bradley use the example...
Commentary: The Progressive Captivity of Orthodox Churches in America
Rev. Johannes L. Jacobse looks at what was behind the criticism of St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary’s partnership with the Acton Institute on a recent poverty conference. He points out that some who adhere to the “ancient faith” of Eastern Orthodoxy have very left-leaning ideas about economics and politics. The poverty conference, Fr. Hans writes, reveals to Orthodox Christians that their thinking on poverty issues is underdeveloped and that those who objected “relied solely on ideas drawn from Progressive ideology.”...
How to Measure an Economy
Among the most significant economic challenges in America today is getting Americans to understand what an economy is. When the Latin term oeconomia was first used in the 1500s it meant “household management.” A few centuries later, the term political economy was used in reference to the economies of states or polities. It wasn’t until the modern era, though, that “economy” became to refer primarily to the production and distribution of national e and wealth and lost almost all connection...
Reclaiming Feminism
AEI Scholar Christina Hoff Sommers is on a quest to reclaim feminism. Her new book, Freedom Feminism and Why It Matters Today, explores why so many women today reject the title of “feminist.” She discusses the topic further in the following video. ...
Religion & Liberty: The Moral Crisis of Crony Capitalism
Today’s new rich is the “government rich” according to Peter Schweizer. Massive centralization of money, resources, and regulation has allowed our public servants and many big businesses to thrive. The poor, new business start ups, the taxpayer, and the free market are punished. Washington and corporate elites profit from the rules and regulations they create for their own benefit and their cronies. As daily news reports currently reminds us, Washington is a cesspool of corruption and abuse of power. It’s...
Virginia Power Company Prudently Rejects Renewable Mandate Resolution
One of the greatest benefits of living in the United States is our access to plentiful, affordable domestic energy. These benefits extend to the nation’s poor who enjoy an unprecedented wealth of heat in the winter and air conditioning in the summer, plentiful light in the evening hours and electronic devices that power up at the press of a button. Driving up costs for energy forces a itant rise in costs to consumers in every strata of society. Such has...
Why Jesus is (Probably) Not a Keynesian
In a recent interview with Peter Enns, author and theologian N.T. Wright notes that in America, “the spectrum of liberal conservative theology tends often to sit rather closely with the spectrum of left and right in politics,” whereas, in other places, this is not quite the case: In England, you will find that people who are very conservative theologically by what we normally mean conservative in other words, believing in Jesus, believing in his death and resurrection, believing in the...
Art and the Common Good
Reformed theologian Abraham Kuyper, in his work Wisdom & Wonder, explores humanity’s relationship to creativity: Whereas idol worship leads away from the spiritual, obscures the spiritual, and drives it into the background, symbolic worship by contrast possesses the capacity, by repeatedly connecting the visible symbol with the spiritual, to direct a people still dependent on the sensuous toward the spiritual and to nurture that people unto the spiritual. Art should lead us to look beyond the created object, the artist...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved